Emma Raducanu Withdraws from Italian Open: A Disrupted Season Hits a Critical Juncture
In yet another frustrating chapter of what was supposed to be a defining season, Emma Raducanu has been forced to withdraw from the Italian Open in Rome. The British No. 1, who has not played a competitive match since early March, cited a post-viral illness as the primary reason for her latest withdrawal. The news, confirmed by tournament officials on Tuesday, represents a significant blow to Raducanu’s preparation for the French Open, which begins on 24 May.
Raducanu had been scheduled to open her campaign in the Eternal City against either Solana Sierra or a qualifier, with a tantalising potential third-round clash against Coco Gauff on the horizon. Instead, the 23-year-old will remain on the sidelines, having not stepped onto a clay court in competitive action all season. This marks the second consecutive WTA 1000 event she has missed, following her decision to pull out of the Mutua Madrid Open last week due to a combination of illness and a nagging hand injury.
The timing could hardly be more concerning. With Roland-Garros less than three weeks away, Raducanu is running out of road to build the match sharpness and clay-court rhythm required to compete at the highest level. Let’s break down what this means for her immediate future, the state of her game, and the broader implications for British tennis.
The Illness That Won’t Go Away: A Season on Hold
Raducanu’s 2025 season has been a study in stop-start frustration. After a promising start in Australia, where she reached the third round of the Australian Open, the wheels began to wobble in February. A virus picked up during the Middle East swing initially seemed manageable, but it has proven stubbornly persistent. The post-viral illness that forced her out of Indian Wells in March has lingered, leaving her unable to train at full intensity or sustain the physical demands of a professional match.
Speaking to the WTA’s official channels before her withdrawal, Raducanu admitted she was “not where I want to be physically.” The decision to skip Rome was made after medical consultation, with her team prioritising long-term health over short-term gain. Yet the pattern is becoming alarmingly familiar: a talented player whose body keeps interrupting her momentum.
- Indian Wells (March): Withdrew due to post-viral illness.
- Miami Open (March): Did not compete.
- Mutua Madrid Open (April): Withdrew due to illness and hand injury.
- Italian Open (May): Withdrew due to post-viral illness.
This marks the longest competitive absence of Raducanu’s career since her recovery from triple wrist and ankle surgery in 2023. The irony is painful: just when she seemed to have conquered the injury demons that plagued her early years on tour, a viral infection has thrown her schedule into chaos. The hand injury, while not serious enough to require surgery, has been a compounding factor, limiting her ability to practise groundstrokes and serves without discomfort.
For a player who relies heavily on timing, precision, and explosive movement, the lack of court time is a triple threat. Clay, in particular, demands relentless sliding, low-to-high swing paths, and the ability to construct points over longer rallies. Without those reps, Raducanu is effectively heading into the French Open cold—a risky proposition even for the most seasoned clay-court specialists.
Rome’s Missed Opportunity: What Could Have Been
The Italian Open is the last WTA 1000 event before Roland-Garros, making it the final high-stakes tune-up for the world’s elite. For Raducanu, it represented a golden opportunity to bank crucial ranking points and test her game against top-tier opposition. Last year in Rome, she produced some of her best tennis on clay, reaching the fourth round before falling to eventual champion Coco Gauff in a competitive three-setter. That run was a clear signal that her game could translate to the dirt.
This year, the draw in Rome is stacked. Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka, and Elena Rybakina headline a field that is arguably the strongest of the clay season outside of Paris. Raducanu’s absence is a blow not only to her own preparations but to the tournament’s narrative. A potential clash with Gauff, the world No. 3, would have been a box-office draw—a rematch of a match that showcased Raducanu’s resilience and shot-making ability.
Instead, fans are left wondering what might have been. The British No. 1’s game is tailor-made for clay in many ways: her slice backhand stays low, her movement is fluid, and her willingness to absorb pace allows her to neutralise heavy topspin. But none of that matters if she cannot get on the practice court. The hand injury, while not a structural issue, has been a persistent irritant. Reports from her camp suggest she has been limited to light hitting sessions, with no full-intensity rallies or match-play scenarios.
“It’s a shame because Rome is a tournament I really enjoy,” Raducanu said in a statement. “I love the clay, the city, and the fans. But I have to listen to my body and make sure I’m ready to compete when I do return.” That sentiment is wise, but the calendar waits for no one. Every day she spends recovering is a day her rivals spend sharpening their craft.
Expert Analysis: The French Clock Is Ticking
From a strategic standpoint, Raducanu’s decision to withdraw is both understandable and deeply worrying. The post-viral illness has clearly sapped her energy reserves, and pushing through a WTA 1000 event without proper preparation risks a more serious physical setback. However, the elephant in the room is the French Open. With just three weeks until the main draw begins in Paris, Raducanu has no competitive matches on clay this season.
History tells us that players who arrive at Roland-Garros without a clay-court lead-in face an uphill battle. Even the greats—think Serena Williams or Novak Djokovic—have struggled when forced to skip the European clay swing. For Raducanu, who has never progressed beyond the second round in Paris (2022), the challenge is monumental.
Let’s examine the numbers:
- 0 clay-court matches played in 2025.
- Last competitive match: 7 March, Indian Wells (hard court).
- Best French Open result: Second round (2022).
- Career clay-court win percentage: 52% (compared to 62% on hard courts).
The lack of match rhythm is not just about timing or footwork—it’s about confidence. Clay demands a different mental approach: longer points, more patience, and the ability to construct rallies rather than rely on outright power. Raducanu’s natural instinct is to take the ball early and dictate, a style that works brilliantly on fast hard courts but can be neutralised on slow, high-bouncing clay.
If she does manage to enter the French Open, she will likely need a favourable draw to survive the first week. An early-round meeting with a qualifier or a lower-ranked opponent might give her a chance to ease into the tournament. But a tough draw—say, a seed like Beatriz Haddad Maia or a clay-court specialist like Anna Kalinskaya—could spell an early exit.
There is also the matter of her ranking. Raducanu currently sits at No. 42 in the world, a position that ensures she will be seeded at Roland-Garros. That seeding protects her from facing a top-10 player in the first two rounds, but it does not guarantee safety. The depth on the WTA Tour is such that unseeded players like Viktoriya Tomova or Elina Avanesyan are capable of causing upsets on clay.
What Next? Predictions and the Path Forward
So, what does the immediate future hold for Emma Raducanu? The most realistic scenario is that she continues to rest and rehab, targeting a return at a smaller clay-court event in the week before the French Open. There are two WTA 250 tournaments in Strasbourg and Rabat that run from 18-24 May, offering a last-ditch opportunity to play matches before Paris. However, entering either event would require her to be fully fit and cleared by her medical team—a big ask given the lingering nature of her illness.
Another option is to skip the clay season entirely and focus on the grass-court swing in June, where she has historically performed better. Raducanu reached the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2024 and the semi-finals of the Nottingham Open. Grass rewards her flat hitting, quick footwork, and aggressive return game—traits that have been blunted on clay. Yet writing off Roland-Garros would be a significant decision, especially given the ranking points on offer.
From a prediction standpoint, I believe Raducanu will attempt to play the French Open, even if undercooked. The lure of a Grand Slam is too strong, and her team will be wary of the psychological damage that comes with skipping a major. However, I do not expect her to go deep. A second-round or third-round exit seems the most likely outcome, barring a favourable draw and a sudden return to form.
Longer-term, the key for Raducanu is consistency of health. She has proven she can beat top-10 players—her wins over Jessica Pegula, Ons Jabeur, and Belinda Bencic are evidence of that. But she cannot do so if she is constantly playing catch-up. The post-viral illness is a reminder that even the most talented athletes are vulnerable to the unseen challenges of the tour.
Conclusion: A Test of Resilience
Emma Raducanu’s withdrawal from the Italian Open is the latest twist in a season that has tested her patience, her body, and her resolve. It is easy to forget that she is still just 23 years old, with a career that has already been defined by extremes: a stunning US Open title at 18, followed by a series of injuries and setbacks. The narrative is not one of decline, but of a young player learning to navigate the brutal reality of professional tennis.
Rome was a missed opportunity, but it is not a disaster. The French Open remains the target, and if Raducanu can get her health right—even for a few matches—she has the talent to cause an upset. The clay may not be her surface, but her ability to adapt and compete has never been in question. What she needs now is time, patience, and a stroke of luck.
For British tennis fans, the hope is that this latest setback is a blip, not a pattern. For Raducanu, the road to Roland-Garros just got steeper. But if there is one thing we have learned about her, it is to never write her off. The comeback, when it comes, will be worth the wait.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
